MAKER DAD: Making at the Right Price

Having been in the same house for more than 15 years now, we’ve acquired many tools. I once bought a portable band saw because Adam Savage had one and the price was right on e-Bay. In addition to the portable band saw (which REALLY is useful) my tool list is significant and includes:

Table Saw, Circular Saw, SawzAll, Miter Saw

Free standing Drill Press

Corded & Cordless drills

Grinder

Workbench with vises

Hammers, Mallets & Drivers

100Kg Anvil, a forge & tools

Power Planer

Biscuit Joiner

Bench top belt & disc sander

Belt sander

4” grinder

Eight drawer rolling tool chest

15 Gallon Compressor

Do I really “need” all these tools? Probably not, but it makes things easier when I have the best tool for the job and get the work done quickly and precisely.

The question I get from other parents is: “What basic tools do we really need?” The answer depends on how deep you get into being a Maker. In the early process of “making” things you need to be able to:

Precisely cut wood, plastic, paper, fabric & other light materials

Attach or “join” those items you have previously cut

Reshape an object

Take an existing item apart to reuse or repurpose components

Here are my recommendations for tool kits ranging from the bare essentials to advanced components depending on your budget and the making experience you want to facilitate.

Basic Tool Kit (for about $50)

Note: as you start out, Harbor Freight and the local Dollar Store are great places to source your tools. If you use them enough to wear them out, buy a better one the next time. Yard sales are also a great place to look for non-powered tools.

Here is the Basic List:

Hot melt glue gun ($2-3)

A multi-part “bit and driver” set from Costco or Orchard Supply Hardware. This is NOT the drill bit set, but rather the set with Torx, Hex, Square, Flathead, Phillips and other “bits’ and a handle to turn them ($9-15)

Utility knife ($1-3)

Multipurpose wood saw ($7-10)

Hacksaw ($1-5)

Claw Hammer ($3-5)

Needle Nose Pliers ($1-5)

Crescent wrench ($1-4)

Side Cutter pliers ($1-4)

Wood Glue ($2-3)

Superglue ($2-4)

Screw assortment ($5)

Nails ($2-5)

Measuring tape (free at harbor Freight--watch for the coupon)

In this kit the multi-bit set may be the most valuable, especially if you are going to take items apart and reuse components.

The next level involves adding some power tools, but keep in mind that while the upscale 18-24 volt battery pack tools are shop sexy, they are a lot more expensive than the corded ones and will require replacing the battery packs at some point.

At this point you will have the tools to make almost anything from a bird house to a plastic housing for a custom built computer. Now let’s look at the upper end of the things we have found valuable.

Rounding Out Your MakerSpace

There is no definitive guide book to making, but if there were the fine print would read: "To quickly add value to your MakerSpace, create infrastructure." Here are a few items which really add value by addressing space and equipment bottlenecks that naturally arise in a MakerSpace.

Jawhorse from Rockwell. Expensive at $160 but hugely versatile

Ketter folding workbench with clamps. $50 at Costco and worth every penny

Dremel tool $(30-120) plus accessories

Free Standing Drill Press (free, but I had to haul it home)

Portable Milwaukee band saw

Bench grinder ($35 at Harbor Freight)

File set ($6 at harbor Freight)

Wood Chisel set ($5 at Harbor Freight)

A multi-drawer, pre-stocked hardware assortment! ($20-80)

The last item on this list is the one we go to the most often. We have a 4-drawer Olympia with trays of:

English nuts, bolts, washers

Metric nuts, bolts, washers

Wood and metal screws in different sized and head shapes

Electrical connectors, roll pins, cotter pins, circlips, o-rings

Often in the course of a project, when we need a specific size part, it is there in the kit. No trip to Home Depot. We figure that over time that this kit has saved hundreds of trips and let us finish projects much faster, which is important with kids around.

This is not the complete list of tools in our shop (some of which I haven’t seen in months) but hopefully you have a practical understanding of what it takes to start a MakerSpace. Of course, these kits aren't the only approach. There are low-tech solutions which place more emphasis on making with arts and crafts (à la design-thinking) and high-tech solutions involving CNC machines, 3D printers, and laser cutters. Not to mention a ton of robotics-oriented materials like the low-cost Arduino boards. If we've left anything off the list that you've found valuable in your MakerSpace, don't hesitate to reach out or leave a comment!

Having been in the same house for more than 15 years now, we’ve acquired many tools. I once bought a portable band saw because Adam Savage had one and the price was right on e-Bay. In addition to the portable band saw (which REALLY is useful) my tool list is significant and includes:

Table Saw, Circular Saw, SawzAll, Miter Saw

Free standing Drill Press

Corded & Cordless drills

Grinder

Workbench with vises

Hammers, Mallets & Drivers

100Kg Anvil, a forge & tools

Power Planer

Biscuit Joiner

Bench top belt & disc sander

Belt sander

4” grinder

Eight drawer rolling tool chest

15 Gallon Compressor

Do I really “need” all these tools? Probably not, but it makes things easier when I have the best tool for the job and get the work done quickly and precisely.

The question I get from other parents is: “What basic tools do we really need?” The answer depends on how deep you get into being a Maker. In the early process of “making” things you need to be able to:

Precisely cut wood, plastic, paper, fabric & other light materials

Attach or “join” those items you have previously cut

Reshape an object

Take an existing item apart to reuse or repurpose components

Here are my recommendations for tool kits ranging from the bare essentials to advanced components depending on your budget and the making experience you want to facilitate.

Basic Tool Kit (for about $50)

Note: as you start out, Harbor Freight and the local Dollar Store are great places to source your tools. If you use them enough to wear them out, buy a better one the next time. Yard sales are also a great place to look for non-powered tools.

Here is the Basic List:

Hot melt glue gun ($2-3)

A multi-part “bit and driver” set from Costco or Orchard Supply Hardware. This is NOT the drill bit set, but rather the set with Torx, Hex, Square, Flathead, Phillips and other “bits’ and a handle to turn them ($9-15)

Utility knife ($1-3)

Multipurpose wood saw ($7-10)

Hacksaw ($1-5)

Claw Hammer ($3-5)

Needle Nose Pliers ($1-5)

Crescent wrench ($1-4)

Side Cutter pliers ($1-4)

Wood Glue ($2-3)

Superglue ($2-4)

Screw assortment ($5)

Nails ($2-5)

Measuring tape (free at harbor Freight--watch for the coupon)

In this kit the multi-bit set may be the most valuable, especially if you are going to take items apart and reuse components.

The next level involves adding some power tools, but keep in mind that while the upscale 18-24 volt battery pack tools are shop sexy, they are a lot more expensive than the corded ones and will require replacing the battery packs at some point.

At this point you will have the tools to make almost anything from a bird house to a plastic housing for a custom built computer. Now let’s look at the upper end of the things we have found valuable.

Rounding Out Your MakerSpace

There is no definitive guide book to making, but if there were the fine print would read: "To quickly add value to your MakerSpace, create infrastructure." Here are a few items which really add value by addressing space and equipment bottlenecks that naturally arise in a MakerSpace.

Jawhorse from Rockwell. Expensive at $160 but hugely versatile

Ketter folding workbench with clamps. $50 at Costco and worth every penny

Dremel tool $(30-120) plus accessories

Free Standing Drill Press (free, but I had to haul it home)

Portable Milwaukee band saw

Bench grinder ($35 at Harbor Freight)

File set ($6 at harbor Freight)

Wood Chisel set ($5 at Harbor Freight)

A multi-drawer, pre-stocked hardware assortment! ($20-80)

The last item on this list is the one we go to the most often. We have a 4-drawer Olympia with trays of:

English nuts, bolts, washers

Metric nuts, bolts, washers

Wood and metal screws in different sized and head shapes

Electrical connectors, roll pins, cotter pins, circlips, o-rings

Often in the course of a project, when we need a specific size part, it is there in the kit. No trip to Home Depot. We figure that over time that this kit has saved hundreds of trips and let us finish projects much faster, which is important with kids around.

This is not the complete list of tools in our shop (some of which I haven’t seen in months) but hopefully you have a practical understanding of what it takes to start a MakerSpace. Of course, these kits aren't the only approach. There are low-tech solutions which place more emphasis on making with arts and crafts (à la design-thinking) and high-tech solutions involving CNC machines, 3D printers, and laser cutters. Not to mention a ton of robotics-oriented materials like the low-cost Arduino boards. If we've left anything off the list that you've found valuable in your MakerSpace, don't hesitate to reach out or leave a comment!